The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Police chief defends payouts to rapist

Females not at risk from informant

- Ellie cullen

A police chief has hit back at “untrue” claims that a convicted child rapist paid to help snare a paedophile gang was placed “in the midst” of vulnerable women and girls.

Northumbri­a Police Chief Constable Steve Ashman accepted officers faced a “moral dilemma” over the £10,000 paid to the sex offender, known only as XY, in helping secure conviction­s.

A total of 17 men and one woman were convicted of or admitted charges including rape, supplying drugs and inciting prostituti­on, in a series of trials at Newcastle Crown Court.

Responding to criticism – including accusation­s from an “appalled” NSPCC that police planted the informant – Mr Ashman told BBC Breakfast: “It’s quite surprising and disappoint­ing for the NSPCC in particular to adopt the stance they have.

“This is an ill-informed position that they’ve taken. The fact of the matter is we absolutely did not plant XY, the informant, in the midst of vulnerable women and girls.

“Not only did we not ask him to do it, there’s no evidence whatsoever that he was engaged in offending against these victims or anybody else.”

He said use of XY was to find who the suspects were, their addresses, and what crime they were involved in.

He said: “I absolutely understand that this is challengin­g for some people but I’m left with a question that I throw back ...what would you do in those circumstan­ces?

“Would you take that risk under carefully managed circumstan­ces, that doesn’t expose him to vulnerable women and girls? Is that the right thing to do? Morally does that weigh up? To me, it does.

“Some people might disagree with that, I get that – it’s a problem that we wrestle with ourselves – but I’ve got to be content on the back of 93 conviction­s, over 300 years of imprisonme­nt, without the verdicts that we received yesterday, this was the right thing to do overall.”

Asked whether the informant was necessary to gain conviction­s, he said: “You might have got that evidence through other means but it might have taken a whole lot longer and that in itself would have exposed vulnerable women and girls – given the scale of this – to an unacceptab­le level of risk, and personally that doesn’t sit comfortabl­y morally with me either.”

Jim Gamble, who set up the Government’s taskforce to fight child sexual exploitati­on, criticised the police move.

He told the BBC: “I think all police forces are under pressure to get things right.

“But there are ways and means to doing it ... there need to be limits and there should be lines that shouldn’t be crossed.

“In my opinion they have gone way over the line on this one.”

COURIER POLL

Do you agree with a police decision to pay a convicted paedophile for informatio­n on a child abuse gang?

 ??  ?? A total of 17 men and one woman were convicted or admitted charges of rape, drugs supply and inciting prostituti­on.
A total of 17 men and one woman were convicted or admitted charges of rape, drugs supply and inciting prostituti­on.
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